Background/Aim: Appendicitis and its complications remain a common problem affecting patients of all age groups. Foreign bodies are a rare cause of appendicitis. We tried to define potentially dangerous foreign bodies that may cause appendicitis and summarize general guidelines for their clinical management. Methods: A 100-year literature review including 256 cases of ingested foreign bodies within the appendix with emphasis on: (1) objects that are more prone to cause appendicitis or appendiceal perforation; (2) foreign bodies that are radiopaque and may be detected during follow-up with plain abdominal films, and (3) guidelines for clinical management. Results: Complications usually occur with sharp, thin, stiff, pointed and long objects. The majority of these objects are radiopaque. An immediate attempt should be made to remove a risky object by gastroscopy. If this fails, clinical follow-up with serial abdominal radiographs should be obtained. If the anatomical position of the object appears not to change and, most commonly, remains in the right lower abdominal quadrant, an attempt at colonoscopic removal is indicated. If this is unsuccessful, laparoscopic exploration with fluoroscopic guidance should be carried out to localize and remove the objects either by ileotomy, colotomy, or by appendectomy. Conclusion: Foreign bodies causing appendicitis are rare. However, if stiff or pointed objects get into the appendiceal lumen they have a high risk for appendicitis or perforation. These foreign bodies are almost always radiopaque.
Background:Clostridium difficile has become recognized as a cause of nosocomial infection which may progress to a fulminant disease. Methods: Literature review using electronic literature research back to 1966 utilizing Medline and Current Contents. All publications on antibiotic-associated diarrhea, antibiotic-associated colitis, and pseudomembranous colitis as well as C. difficile infection were included. We addressed established and potential risk factors for C. difficile disease such as an impaired immune system and cost benefits of different diagnostic tests. An algorithm is outlined for diagnosis and both medical and surgical management of mild, moderate and severe C. difficile disease. Results: Diagnosis of C. difficile infection should be suspected in patients with diarrhea, who have received antibiotics within 2 months or whose symptoms started after hospitalization. A stool specimen should be tested for the presence of leukocytes and C. difficile toxins. If this is negative and symptoms persist, stool should be tested with ‘rapid’ enzyme immunoabsorbent and stool cytotoxin assays, which are the most cost-effective tests. Endoscopy and other imaging studies are reserved for severe and rapidly progressive courses. Oral metronidazole or vancomycin are the antibiotics of choice. Surgery is rarely required for selected patients refractory to medical treatment. The threshold for surgery in severe cases with risk factors including an impaired immune system should be low. Conclusion:C. difficile infection has been recognized with increased frequency as a nosocomial infection. Early diagnosis with immunoassays of the stool and prompt medical therapy have a high cure rate. Metronidazole has supplanted oral vancomycin as the drug of first choice for treating C. difficile infections.
For determination of the efficacy of intraluminal bowel decompression by an endoscopically placed Dennis tube, 174 patients with paralytic ileus or different kinds of partial small bowel obstruction were reviewed retrospectively. There were 66 cases (37.9%) of early postoperative ileus (A), 27 (15.5%) of late postoperative ileus (B), 38 (21.8%) of paralytic ileus (C), 31 (17.8%) with obstruction due to advanced intraabdominal tumors (D), and 12 (6.8%) of obstructive ileus caused by inflammatory stenosis of the small bowel in Crohn's disease (E). Successful endoscopic placement of the intestinal tube was achieved in 97.2% of patients. Placement of the tube was impossible in 5 cases. A total of 95 patients (54.6%) were successfully managed by long intestinal tube decompression. Success rates for the individual groups were 71.2% (A), 18.5% (B), 86.8% (C), 16.1% (D), and 41.7% (E). Some 75 patients (43.1%) had to be operated on because of insufficient conservative therapy. Four patients with advanced intraabdominal tumors died during the treatment with the intestinal tube; 13 patients died postoperatively. There was no tube-related mortality, but tube-related complications occurred in 6.9%. We conclude that intraluminal intestinal tube decompression after endoscopic placement provides a therapeutic tool with a concomitant low complication and high success rate in paralytic and early postoperative ileus.
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